“They’ve been very forthcoming,” the D.C. Democrat told CQ Roll Call in an interview a few hours after the senators announced the bill, adding that she was “sorry” she didn’t know about it in advance.

“I really think that Harry Truman was one of the nation’s greatest presidents,” she added, heaping praise on No. 33. Norton said Truman deserves a “working memorial — something emblematic of the working man’s president.”

Norton promised to co-sponsor a House version of the legislation to rename the transportation hub as the “Harry S. Truman Union Station,” saying she applauded the idea but wanted to make sure Union Station not be lost in the shuffle.

Norton is optimistic that a new high-profile name will reinvigorate the commitment of Congress to help make Union Station “a world-class, 21st-century intermodal facility.” She claimed that adding a president’s name would emphasize the fact that the Union Station in her city is “the most important of the union stations around the country.”

Norton is a senior member of the Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, which will likely have jurisdiction of the bill in the House.

Jay Va

May 11, 2014
6:42 a.m.

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Campus Reporter Bridget Bowman (@bridgetbhc) keeps her eye what's happening on and around the Hill. She covers local elections, the Capitol Hill community, House and Senate administration, legislative agencies and congressional oversight over the District of Columbia.

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